
After My Husband’s Mistress Shot Me on a Rooftop
Chapter 1
The smell of industrial-strength ammonia clung to my skin like a second layer of clothing. It was a sharp, chemical sting that seven years of scrubbing floors at Payne Industries hadn’t been able to wash away. I adjusted the scratchy collar of my gray janitor’s uniform, my fingers trembling not from the cold, but from the pathetic, fluttering hope in my chest.
Today was my twenty-seventh birthday.
In my pocket, wrapped in a napkin, was a single, slightly smashed vanilla cupcake I’d bought from a discount bakery. It was all I could afford after transferring ninety percent of my paycheck to the account Edward claimed was his “debt relief fund.” For seven years, I had eaten discarded vegetables and lived in a basement apartment that smelled of mildew, all to help the man I loved climb out of a bankruptcy that had supposedly ruined his life.
I pushed open the heavy mahogany doors of the executive lounge. I wasn’t supposed to be here—janitors were invisible ghosts meant for the night shift—but I wanted to share this one small sweetness with him.
The air inside was different. It didn’t smell like bleach; it smelled of expensive leather, imported cigars, and French perfume.
“Edward?” I whispered, the name catching in my throat.
The room was bathed in golden light. A crowd of people—executives I usually saw only from the knees down as I polished their shoes—were gathered in a circle, laughing. In the center stood Edward. But he wasn’t wearing the frayed, second-hand suit he wore when he came to my apartment to collect my money. He was draped in bespoke Italian wool, a Rolex glinting under the chandelier light.
He was holding a knife.
Before him sat a cake the size of a wedding tier, a monolithic tower of white fondant and spun sugar, encrusted with what looked like glittering crystals. He sliced into it, the crowd cheering.
“Happy Birthday, darling,” Edward said, his voice smooth, devoid of the stress he always performed for me.
He handed the first slice to a woman with sleek, raven hair and eyes that looked like shards of ice. Julie Morgan. My supervisor. The woman who had written me up three times last week for “missing spots” on the floor.
“Edward?” I stepped forward, the rubber soles of my work boots squeaking loudly on the marble.
The laughter died instantly. The silence that followed was heavy, suffocating.
Edward turned. His eyes, usually so warm when he begged for my help, were flat and cold. He looked at me not with love, but with the annoyance one might feel for a stain on a silk tie.
“I… I brought us a cupcake,” I stammered, pulling the smashed treat from my pocket. “For my birthday.”
Julie let out a high, tinkling laugh. “Oh, look, Edward. The help thinks she’s people.”
Edward sighed, pinching the bridge of his nose. He reached toward a serving tray, picked up a piece of stale, green-spotted bread intended for the trash, and tossed it. It landed with a wet thud at my feet.
“There,” Edward said, his lip curling. “That’s what a debtor deserves. Happy birthday, Catherine.”
My blood ran cold. “Debtor? Edward, I’ve been paying your debt. Seven years. I’ve given you everything. We’re in this together.”
“Together?” Edward laughed, a harsh, barking sound. “You really are an idiot, aren’t you?”
He reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out a document, slapping it onto the table next to the cake. A marriage certificate.
*Edward Payne and Julie Morgan. Dated seven years ago.*
The room spun. The floor seemed to tilt beneath my feet.
“I was never bankrupt, Catherine,” Edward said, his voice bored. “My family owns this building. We own the company. We own the city.”
Julie stepped forward, licking frosting from a silver fork. “And your little ‘contributions’? That was my spa money, sweetie. Seven years of manicures and facials, courtesy of the janitor. It was a fun little game, seeing how far you’d debase yourself for ‘love.’”
A scream tore itself from my throat—a raw, animal sound of grief. My mother had died while I was working double shifts to pay these people. I had forgone my own dreams, my dignity, my entire youth.
“You monsters!” I lunged forward, blind with rage.
Two security guards seized my arms before I could take three steps. They wrenched my shoulders back, pinning me.
“Get this trash out of here,” Julie said, waving her hand dismissively. “She’s ruining the vibe.”
As they dragged me backward, I grabbed the doorframe, my fingernails digging into the wood. “Edward! How could you? I broke my leg for you! I starved for you!”
Edward walked over, his polished oxford shoe stopping inches from me. He looked down, his expression completely void of humanity.
“And you’re still annoying me,” he said.
He drew his leg back and kicked. Hard.
His toe connected squarely with my right shin—the same leg that had been shattered in that ‘accidental’ car crash years ago. The bone screamed. A white-hot bolt of agony shot up my spine, and my vision went black for a second. My grip on the doorframe failed.
I collapsed, gasping for air, clutching my leg as bile rose in my throat.
“If I see you near my building again,” Edward whispered, leaning down so only I could hear the menace in his voice, “I won’t just break the leg. I’ll finish the job.”
The guards hauled me up and threw me out the side exit. I landed hard on the wet asphalt of the alleyway. The heavy steel door slammed shut, sealing the warmth and the light inside, leaving me alone in the pouring rain, clutching my shattered leg and the crumbs of a life that had been a lie from the very beginning.
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